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Butternut Squash Ravioli

I mentioned after cleaning up my grandmother's pasta and bread board that I wanted to attempt making pasta, which I really don't have much experience with. I'd recently gotten a vintage ravioli cutter and was eager to try it out, so decided to give my first pasta experience a go with butternut squash ravioli.

Well, the pictures do not show my frustration and the ravioli did indeed turn out delicious and looks like ravioli but I am definitely going to have to re-think how I am going to prepare for future pasta posts! The dough really did not cooperate as I had imagined it would, I had flour everywhere and you cannot touch the camera when you have dough up to your elbows. So, we might not see as many pasta posts on a regular basis like I had hoped, but bear with me as I figure out the nuances of a camera and flour!

I'd just made a butternut squash waffle for 17 Apart and had half of a squash leftover, which is where the idea for butternut squash ravioli came into play. The filling was quite simple to make:

Butternut Squash Ravioli Filling:

1 1/2 cups roasted butternut squash pulp

1/4 cup honey

1t nutmeg

1/2 cup of ricotta cheese

Puree all of the above together in a blender or with a potato masher to complete your ravioli filling and set aside until ready to fill ravioli.

Basic Ravioli Pasta:

2 cups all purpose flour (I used a mixture of white and wheat)

1t salt

4 large eggs (3 for the dough and the 4th for a wash)

1T olive oil

Additional flour for dusting the board

Combine the flour and salt on a board and make a well in the center.

Add the eggs and oil to the center well. Begin to fold the flour in slowly to combine the mixture and work into a ball. This is where my mess began...

Eventually, I got things together and created a dough ball that really began to take shape. I continued to knead back and forth several times, punching the ball down and folding until I had something I could work with. Several different recipes said to allow the dough to rest for 30 minutes. I needed a mental break and was glad to give it a rest. I wrapped the dough in plastic wrap and cleaned up my work surface, the floor, my hands, my arms, and basically the whole kitchen.

After the 30 minute break, I felt ready to tackle the next steps.

Next up, rolling out the dough ball into a thin and even sheet. I floured my work surface and began rolling and stretching the dough. I didn't have a pasta rolling tool, was worried I might not get the right thinness. Using my grandmother's rolling pin turned out to be quite simple and I do feel I got the dough stretched out and thin enough to be able to fold and make raviolis.

A quick egg wash over the pasta sheet acts as a glue for the filling and helps seal the pasta edges once cut. With a few evenly spaced scoops of butternut squash filling onto the pasta sheet, I was eager to fold it over and start cutting:

I simply folded the dough over on top of the filling and began to pressout little round raviolis with my vintage Italian pasta cutter. This was probably the most fun part of the entire process for me:

Now these made some sizable raviolis, 4 would be an adequate serving for one person. I was able to rework the leftover dough into another flat sheet and press out 4 more, ending up with 8 large raviolis ready to cook.

In conclusion, I indeed made my first batch of homemade raviolis. What did I learn?

I feel that a dough machine attached to the blender could have helped create thinner pasta sheets which may have helps make more raviolis. This is something I'll probably look into getting.

This was a lot of work for 8 raviolis!

Pasta is a little messier than I thought going in initially.

I ended up boiling and freeze these for a future dish coming later in the week, so stay tuned!

I'm keeping things real with this post and admitting my struggles — I am certainly open to any pasta advice others may have out there. So I open this up and ask, are there any glaring issues with what I did and are there tools out there that would make life easier for me as I move forward in the homemade pasta world?

Oh that is OK! I did look at the pasta series link and mine looked exactly like that while the eggs were sitting in the flour. That was right before things went hay wire! Yes, I have been looking at some remote options for the camera just have not invested in that yet. Thanks as always for "checking" things out!

It looks like a great first try! I know that any time I have made pasta, I use more eggs than your recipe. Probably double. It leads to a stickier dough initially, but it's very smooth, elastic and rolls out thinner after working it. Another thought is adding your squash to the dough. We make a pumpkin ravioli with the pumpkin added to the dough, with a goat cheese and bacon filling. We serve it with a sage and browned butter sauce. I can't wait to see the next chapter in your ravioli journey. :)

I have a pasta machine that mostly collects dust in the closet, but you may have just inspired me to pull it out and try it again!

I try photographing some of my baking efforts and always reach a point where I stop because I'm getting my camera gunky. Sometimes I pull my 11 year old into the kitchen to 'help'. Maybe you could teach Basil to help photograph?

I have been making my own pasta/ravioli (cheese, meat, mushroom) for years and we have just 1 butternut squash left and decided that I needed to do something special with it other than the normal cook and eat. So Thank You for your post I will be using your filling. Im very excited and hopefully will reply with the happy memory of how delicious they taste.

Tip: if you laid a sheet of plastic wrap over your camera? Just a thought of helping you keep your camera 'gunk' free

An avid home cook, I believe in using simple ingredients, local when possible and am inspired by the principles of supporting a sustainable food system. I’ve cultivated this blog as a way to share my passion for the preparation and enjoyment of food in a way that everyone from beginners to long time foodies can get involved in.

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Hi there, Tim Vidra here — the face behind the blog. I’m so glad you’re here and hope you’ll visit often. Specializing in freelance food and product photography, food styling, writing and social media — I like to tell people that I was born hungry.